templated
Modules are deprecated and will be removed in version 0.14
. Please use action-based configuration instead. See the 0.12 to Bonsai migration guide for details.
Description
[DEPRECATED] Please use the new RenderTemplate
config kind instead.
A special module type, for rendering module templates. See the Config Templates guide for more information.
Specify the name of a ConfigTemplate with the template
field, and provide any expected inputs using the inputs
field. The generated modules becomes sub-modules of this module.
Note that the following common Module configuration fields are disallowed for this module type: build
, local
, description
, include
, exclude
, repositoryUrl
, allowPublish
, generateFiles
, variables
and varfile
Below is the full schema reference. For an introduction to configuring Garden modules, please look at our Configuration guide.
The first section contains the complete YAML schema, and the second section describes each schema key.
templated
modules also export values that are available in template strings. See the Outputs section below for details.
Complete YAML Schema
The values in the schema below are the default values.
Configuration Keys
kind
kind
string
"Module"
"Module"
Yes
type
type
The type of this module.
string
Yes
Example:
name
name
The name of this module.
string
Yes
Example:
build
build
Specify how to build the module. Note that plugins may define additional keys on this object.
object
{"dependencies":[]}
No
build.dependencies[]
build.dependencies[]
build > dependencies
A list of modules that must be built before this module is built.
array[object]
[]
No
Example:
build.dependencies[].name
build.dependencies[].name
build > dependencies > name
Module name to build ahead of this module.
string
Yes
build.dependencies[].copy[]
build.dependencies[].copy[]
build > dependencies > copy
Specify one or more files or directories to copy from the built dependency to this module.
array[object]
[]
No
build.dependencies[].copy[].source
build.dependencies[].copy[].source
build > dependencies > copy > source
POSIX-style path or filename of the directory or file(s) to copy to the target.
posixPath
Yes
build.dependencies[].copy[].target
build.dependencies[].copy[].target
build > dependencies > copy > target
POSIX-style path or filename to copy the directory or file(s), relative to the build directory. Defaults to the same as source path.
posixPath
No
build.timeout
build.timeout
build > timeout
Maximum time in seconds to wait for build to finish.
number
600
No
local
local
If set to true, Garden will run the build command, services, tests, and tasks in the module source directory, instead of in the Garden build directory (under .garden/build/).
Garden will therefore not stage the build for local modules. This means that include/exclude filters and ignore files are not applied to local modules, except to calculate the module/action versions.
If you use use build.dependencies[].copy
for one or more build dependencies of this module, the copied files will be copied to the module source directory (instead of the build directory, as is the default case when local = false
).
Note: This maps to the buildAtSource
option in this module's generated Build action (if any).
boolean
false
No
description
description
A description of the module.
string
No
disabled
disabled
Set to true to skip rendering this template.
boolean
false
No
include[]
include[]
Specify a list of POSIX-style paths or globs that should be regarded as the source files for this module. Files that do not match these paths or globs are excluded when computing the version of the module, when responding to filesystem watch events, and when staging builds.
Note that you can also exclude files using the exclude
field or by placing .gardenignore
files in your source tree, which use the same format as .gitignore
files. See the Configuration Files guide for details.
Also note that specifying an empty list here means no sources should be included.
array[posixPath]
No
Example:
exclude[]
exclude[]
Specify a list of POSIX-style paths or glob patterns that should be excluded from the module. Files that match these paths or globs are excluded when computing the version of the module, when responding to filesystem watch events, and when staging builds.
Note that you can also explicitly include files using the include
field. If you also specify the include
field, the files/patterns specified here are filtered from the files matched by include
. See the Configuration Files guide for details.
Unlike the scan.exclude
field in the project config, the filters here have no effect on which files and directories are watched for changes. Use the project scan.exclude
field to affect those, if you have large directories that should not be watched for changes.
array[posixPath]
No
Example:
repositoryUrl
repositoryUrl
A remote repository URL. Currently only supports git servers. Must contain a hash suffix pointing to a specific branch or tag, with the format: #<branch|tag>
Garden will import the repository source code into this module, but read the module's config from the local garden.yml file.
gitUrl | string
No
Example:
allowPublish
allowPublish
When false, disables pushing this module to remote registries via the publish command.
boolean
true
No
generateFiles[]
generateFiles[]
A list of files to write to the module directory when resolving this module. This is useful to automatically generate (and template) any supporting files needed for the module.
array[object]
[]
No
generateFiles[].sourcePath
generateFiles[].sourcePath
generateFiles > sourcePath
POSIX-style filename to read the source file contents from, relative to the path of the module (or the ConfigTemplate configuration file if one is being applied). This file may contain template strings, much like any other field in the configuration.
posixPath
No
generateFiles[].targetPath
generateFiles[].targetPath
generateFiles > targetPath
POSIX-style filename to write the resolved file contents to, relative to the path of the module source directory (for remote modules this means the root of the module repository, otherwise the directory of the module configuration).
Note that any existing file with the same name will be overwritten. If the path contains one or more directories, they will be automatically created if missing.
posixPath
Yes
generateFiles[].resolveTemplates
generateFiles[].resolveTemplates
generateFiles > resolveTemplates
By default, Garden will attempt to resolve any Garden template strings in source files. Set this to false to skip resolving template strings. Note that this does not apply when setting the value
field, since that's resolved earlier when parsing the configuration.
boolean
true
No
generateFiles[].value
generateFiles[].value
generateFiles > value
The desired file contents as a string.
string
No
variables
variables
A map of variables scoped to this particular module. These are resolved before any other parts of the module configuration and take precedence over project-scoped variables. They may reference project-scoped variables, and generally use any template strings normally allowed when resolving modules.
object
No
varfile
varfile
Specify a path (relative to the module root) to a file containing variables, that we apply on top of the module-level variables
field.
The format of the files is determined by the configured file's extension:
.yaml
/.yml
- YAML. The file must consist of a YAML document, which must be a map (dictionary). Keys may contain any value type. YAML format is used by default..env
- Standard "dotenv" format, as defined by dotenv..json
- JSON. Must contain a single JSON object (not an array).
NOTE: The default varfile format was changed to YAML in Garden v0.13, since YAML allows for definition of nested objects and arrays.
To use different module-level varfiles in different environments, you can template in the environment name to the varfile name, e.g. varfile: "my-module.${environment.name}.env
(this assumes that the corresponding varfiles exist).
posixPath
No
Example:
template
template
The ConfigTemplate to use to generate the sub-modules of this module.
string
Yes
inputs
inputs
A map of inputs to pass to the ConfigTemplate. These must match the inputs schema of the ConfigTemplate.
Note: You can use template strings for the inputs, but be aware that inputs that are used to generate the resulting config names and other top-level identifiers must be resolvable when scanning for configs, and thus cannot reference other actions, modules or runtime variables. See the environment configuration context reference to see template strings that are safe to use for inputs used to generate config identifiers.
object
No
Outputs
Module Outputs
The following keys are available via the ${modules.<module-name>}
template string key for templated
modules.
${modules.<module-name>.buildPath}
${modules.<module-name>.buildPath}
The build path of the module.
string
Example:
${modules.<module-name>.name}
${modules.<module-name>.name}
The name of the module.
string
${modules.<module-name>.path}
${modules.<module-name>.path}
The source path of the module.
string
Example:
${modules.<module-name>.var.*}
${modules.<module-name>.var.*}
A map of all variables defined in the module.
object
{}
${modules.<module-name>.var.<variable-name>}
${modules.<module-name>.var.<variable-name>}
string | number | boolean | link | array[link]
${modules.<module-name>.version}
${modules.<module-name>.version}
The current version of the module.
string
Example:
Service Outputs
The following keys are available via the ${runtime.services.<service-name>}
template string key for templated
module services. Note that these are only resolved when deploying/running dependants of the service, so they are not usable for every field.
${runtime.services.<service-name>.version}
${runtime.services.<service-name>.version}
The current version of the service.
string
Example:
Task Outputs
The following keys are available via the ${runtime.tasks.<task-name>}
template string key for templated
module tasks. Note that these are only resolved when deploying/running dependants of the task, so they are not usable for every field.
${runtime.tasks.<task-name>.version}
${runtime.tasks.<task-name>.version}
The current version of the task.
string
Example:
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